Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Post-Gazette fires cartoonist Rob Rogers

Newspaper, artist disagree on editing

- By Joyce Gannon

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rob Rogers, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s editorial cartoonist, was fired Thursday. The award-winning cartoonist and Pulitzer Prize finalist whose work was often reprinted in national publicatio­ns had been with the newspaper since 1993.

In a statement, Stephen Spolar, the Post-Gazette’s chief human resources officer, said: “The PostGazett­e does not provide details about employment matters, but in light of Mr. Rogers’ public comments today, we do want to acknowledg­e his long service to the newspaper and our community. Any further discussion­s will be conducted with Mr. Rogers as a private matter.”

In recent weeks, a number of his cartoons, including some on President Donald Trump, were killed by the paper’s editorial director, Keith Burris.

Mr. Burris said Mr. Rogers, 59, was offered a deal in which he would be an independen­t contractor and produce two cartoons per week for the paper’s op-ed page along with his weekly strip, “Brewed on Grant.”

“We tried hard to find a middle way, an accommodat­ion to keep him at the paper,” Mr. Burris said.

He said he did not “suppress” Mr. Rogers’ cartoons but that Mr. Rogers was unwilling to “collaborat­e” with him about his work and ideas.

“We never said he should do no more Trump cartoons or do proTrump cartoons,” Mr. Burris said. “For an in-house staff cartoonist, editing is part of it. Rob’s view was, ‘Take it or leave it.’”

The decision not to run the cartoons was reported widely; Mr. Rogers has tweeted about it as have other journalist­s. Mr. Rogers also has been interviewe­d by CNN and other broadcast outlets about the issue, and the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, the Associatio­n of American Editorial Cartoonist­s and other news industry publicatio­ns have written about Mr. Rogers and the Post-Gazette’s decision to kill some of his cartoons.

In a statement, Mr. Rogers said, “I am incredibly proud of the 34 years I have spent drawing editorial cartoons in Pittsburgh — 25 of

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